Sunday, 21 September 2014

Here, Florian, a PhD student working with Martin Jones and Caroline Bettridge in the CEB group, talks about his recent paper in PLoS ONE on the financial costs of Large Carnivore translocations. The paper provides the first detailed cost analysis of
carnivore translocations and therefore will help conservation managers
make better-informed decisions in the future, especially when budgeting
for actions. The paper is open access here.

With increasing human populations and continuing habitat encroachment, active management of populations of large mammals such as the African big cats is becoming increasingly necessary. A former MMU graduate, Florian Weise, has spent the last 7 years in Namibia studying the conflict between large carnivores and commercial livestock farmers. Namibia still supports healthy free-ranging predator populations and most individuals live outside of formally protected areas on private ranch lands. As a result of persistent conflict on these ranches, dozens (if not hundreds) of large carnivores were haphazardly relocated within the country in the past. However, very little monitoring was carried out and the relocation 'strategy' became more and more controversial. At a wider scale, thousands of large carnivores are translocated throughout Africa each year, with little consideration to cost-effectiveness, and overall efficacy.

Conflict leopard Pp06 caught in a live-trap
after killing 12 cattle calves in less than 2 months (Photo: Florian Weise)

Medical examination of a conflict leopard prior to
translocation. The male was moved over 350km and hunted an adult Mountain zebra
less than 9 hours after release (Photo: Stuart Munro).

The PhD study takes an in-depth look at the biological and technical components of moving predators from different conflict situations into private and public conservation reserves. Between 2008 and 2014 Florian has spent much time in the field following 30 collared individuals, including 23 cheetahs (+ their 10 cubs), 6 leopards and 1 brown hyena. Amongst other things, he has documented their survival, feeding ecology, movements, post-release conflict involvement and reproduction.

Release of study leopard Pp15. The leopard went on to raise
a litter of two cubs which were born only 8 months after release (Photo: Tanja Laschinger).

The
article shows that translocations are costly to undertake, i.e.
approximately 6,900USD for every successful cheetah and about 3,200USD
per a successful leopard, thus limiting the number of translocations that
can be carried out on conservation budgets. The single biggest cost
element was tracking technology (56%), i.e. fitting released animals
with modern VHF and GPS collars. These, however, are necessary to
determine whether the relocation was successful or not. Captive time in a
rehabilitation centre (for example for confiscated or injured
predators) and release mode (either hard release without
acclimatisation, or soft release from a specialised holding pen) also
influence translocation costs significantly.

When things go wrong – dead study cheetah after
trying to defend its first prey against a spotted hyena (Photo: Florian Weise)

Interestingly, the study also describes that a large portion of translocation costs can be recovered from public support (donors and sponsors) because non-lethal management of conflict predators has higher appeal than simply removing offenders or perceived “problem animals”. Effective translocation cost recovery on average was 65% and in many cases over 90%. By sharing monitoring data with affected landowners on a regular basis, Florian also increased the local tolerance of released carnivores within the Namibian farming community. Some collared individuals even became local tourist attractions and therefore provided landowners with an incentive to look after them.

The paper demonstrates that there are very case-specific elements that impact on overall costs, related to specific management considerations such as translocation distance. Surprisingly, the study provides evidence that translocation as a conflict management strategy is not inherently more expensive than other non-lethal techniques currently employed. The article concludes that the most important consideration to be made before translocation is the selection of appropriate candidate animals. For example, in this study none of the five orphaned, habituated cheetahs survived year one after release, despite being the five most-expensive individuals altogether. Conversely, leopards were far cheaper to translocate and almost twice as successful as cheetahs.

Florian and an assistant locating released cheetahs via
VHF-telemetry in the vast landscapes of south-western Namibia (Photo: Cristina Armesto)

The authors argue that translocation should be an available conflict mitigation tool but the strategy should not be utilised as a standard response to conflict situations. Moreover, to justify high expenses, translocation should be reserved for individuals with high conservation importance, e.g. animals from threatened sub-species/populations. The case scenarios outlined therefore provide valuable baseline information for wildlife managers to improve both accountability as well as responsibility of translocations.

This study was supported by the National Geographic Big Cats
Initiative, Chester Zoo, Colchester Zoo, SPOTS Foundation, Bank Windhoek, IDEA
WILD, Sea World and Busch Gardens, Land Rover SA, Windhoek Animal Hospital as
well as many private individuals.

Florian carried out
his research as the principal investigator for the N/a'an ku se Carnivore
Conservation Research Project in Namibia; www.naankuse.com

About the Research Group and blog

This blog includes posts by members of Stuart Marsden's conservation research group based in the School of Science & the Environment at Manchester Metropolitan University. The group mainly includes PhD students working on the conservation ecology of birds and other wildlife, often in the tropics. We also have posts from other collaborators and alumni.